Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Fox & Friends’: Influence comes with the president’s ear

- BY DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK — It’s the epicenter of television journalism, the most influentia­l news show on the air. But “Fox & Friends” doesn’t feel that way.

Fox News Channel’s day-opener seems much like it has for 20 years, a peppy talk show about news that advances a conservati­ve point of view and is mocked by some critics for a lack of intellectu­al rigor.

The difference now is that one of its regular viewers is the most powerful person in the world, who takes his cues from what he sees.

SYMPATHETI­C MINDS

“Fox & Friends” originates from a cavernous, two-story Manhattan studio that overlooks Sixth Avenue, where the push of a button sends banks of lights or even a chandelier descending from the ceiling. During a break in the show one day, Steve Doocy bites into a Chickfil-A breakfast sandwich, Brian Kilmeade scrolls through a tablet and Ainsley Earhardt pulls on a green coat to ward off an early spring chill.

Roughly 1.5 million people watch “Fox & Friends” each day, more than its counterpar­ts at CNN and MSNBC and less than half the audiences for “Good Morning America” or “Today.”

Donald Trump is no stranger to the three hosts — he was a weekly guest to talk about the news before he ran for president — so it doesn’t surprise them he still follows the show.

“As much as he might like us, and I think he does, I think it’s mostly he understand­s our audience,” Kilmeade said. “That’s why he ran for president. He didn’t run for president to be king of New York, or king of Washington. He knows we have a lot of viewers, and he relates best to our viewers.”

Trump’s tweets and actions frequently correspond with segments on “Fox & Friends.”

His move to send National Guard troops to the border with Mexico came after the show reported on a caravan of immigrants headed north. When “F&F” hosts denounced the recent spending bill as bloated the morning after it passed, Trump threatened a veto. Puzzling tweets about a U.S. spying law up for renewal so confused lawmakers that Democratic Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia tweeted the bill “is something the President should have known about long before he turned on Fox this morning.”

YOU TALKING TO ME?

The awareness that Trump is watching is occasional­ly evident on the air. “You know what, Mr. President, that’s a good point,” Doocy said after reading one of Trump’s tweets in February. Analyst Andrew Napolitano offered advice earlier this month when the topic of Trump being interviewe­d by Special Counsel Robert Mueller was raised. “Stay away from that, Mr. President,” Napolitano said.

Trump has spoken directly to the show, like in one tweet: “Thank you to foxandfrie­nds for the great timeline on all of the failures the Obama Administra­tion had against Russia!” And he appeared to answer when Kilmeade said Trump made a mistake to use a vulgarity to refer to African countries. Trump tweeted that morning that his words were tough but “this was not the language used.”

While some Fox personalit­ies are known to dine with or talk regularly with Trump, the hosts say they haven’t spoken with him since he’s been president.

In Washington, lawmakers frequently try to get airtime on Fox when they are trying to get Trump’s ear on policy matters, said congressio­nal aides who sought anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss private thinking.

That’s not the only way to deliver a message. “Fox & Friends” earned nearly $9 million in advertisin­g revenue in January, up from $7.3 million in January 2017, according to Kantar Media,.

Gavin Hadden, “Fox & Friends” executive producer who worked his way up the ranks in a dozen years with the show, said he was unaware of instances when it seemed clear a guest was trying to communicat­e with the president. He’s concerned it could affect the quality of the show if the president’s interest became a preoccupat­ion.

“We put the same show on the air that we have for years,” Hadden said. “We’re trying to have a conversati­on with the American people.”

ZIGGING AND ZAGGING

President Roger Ailes? When Fox’s late CEO was alive, “Fox & Friends” was widely seen as his primary vehicle for expressing the political message he wanted to emphasize that day. Think of the power he’d have with Trump listening.

Today’s “Fox & Friends” has more news, and fewer lifestyle segments, than it used to have but that’s primarily a function of the times. It essentiall­y runs on a formula carefully honed over two decades, and Hadden said he listens closely to viewers to deliver what Fox believes they want to hear.

The show’s opinions are less heavy-handed than baked in. Guest host Pete Hegseth, for example, introduced a story about a Democratic proposal on gun safety by saying, “If they can’t take away your guns, they want your bullets.” Frequent topics include immigratio­n, sanctuary cities and disrespect for the flag or military.

What doesn’t get talked about is also significan­t. On a day when much of Washington speculated about the future of EPA chief Scott Pruitt because of reports about his spending, “Fox & Friends” didn’t cover the story. That day’s show did include segments on an Indiana town where the economy was so strong it couldn’t fill jobs, and a North Carolina man who spoke up to local legislator­s about gun restrictio­ns.

The morning after 22 million people saw a “60 Minutes” interview with Stormy Daniels about her alleged affair with Trump, the story dominated other news programs but was mentioned briefly on “Fox & Friends” news rundowns. Ask the hosts why the story got relatively little play, and they offer different theories. Doocy said the show likes to zig when others zag, Earhardt said Fox recognized it might be an uncomforta­ble subject for families tuning in, while Kilmeade suggested Daniels made little news.

CRITICS

Presidents are usually cognizant of how they’re being covered; President Lyndon Johnson had three television sets installed in the Oval Office to watch the evening news and famously worried he lost the support of the American public when CBS anchor Walter Cronkite editoriali­zed against the Vietnam War.

The degree to which “Fox & Friends” directly influences Trump is highly unusual, said Mitchell Stephens, a New York University professor and journalism historian.

“It’s definitely a hall of mirrors effect with Fox and President Trump,” Stephens said. “They are building their audience with his supporters, so they are positive toward him, with a few honorable exceptions. He wants the praise, so it works for him. One fears that reality itself is getting lost in the hall of mirrors.”

The show attracts some vivid vitriol from critics. The Washington Post’s Erik Wemple wrote the “stupendous­ly idiotic” show is essentiall­y “‘Hannity’ with smiles.” Columnist Richard Cohen said that “it is to journalism what pornograph­y is to sex.” The New York Times’ Charles M. Blow denounced it for a “kindergart­en-level intellectu­al capacity.”

Hadden and the show’s anchors said they don’t believe the show’s critics actually watch it.

The criticism annoys one conservati­ve, Tim Graham of the Media Research Center watchdogs. “I have been in many Hampton Inns over the years, and people watch it over breakfast,” he said. “It’s a pleasant, perky show.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? “Fox & Friends” co-hosts, from left, Steve Doocy, Ainsley Earhardt and Brian Kilmeade appear on their set in New York. Roughly 1.5 million people watch “Fox & Friends” each day, more than its counterpar­ts at CNN and MSNBC and less than half the audiences for “Good Morning America” or “Today.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO “Fox & Friends” co-hosts, from left, Steve Doocy, Ainsley Earhardt and Brian Kilmeade appear on their set in New York. Roughly 1.5 million people watch “Fox & Friends” each day, more than its counterpar­ts at CNN and MSNBC and less than half the audiences for “Good Morning America” or “Today.”

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